Profiling of host and parasite factors associated with organ dysfunction in severe malaria

Lead Research Organisation: London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
Department Name: Infectious and Tropical Diseases

Abstract

Severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria is a complex disease with a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations, which accounts for the majority of malaria-associated deaths. In low transmission settings like Asia, it predominantly affects adults, who often develop brain, lungs, liver or kidney dysfunction, either alone or in combination. The mechanisms leading to these complications have never been systematically investigated, but the binding of Plasmodium falciparum-parasitised red blood cells to the vessels walls of these organs, as well as the immune response of the host are likely to be involved.

Recent results suggest that a specific type of the parasite surface protein PfEMP1 that binds to two receptors called ICAM-1 and EPCR on the vessel walls are associated with the development of cerebral malaria in African children, the form of severe disease that affects the brain. We therefore postulated that distinct combinations of parasite PfEMP1 types and receptors on endothelial cells lining the vasculature are associated with specific organ dysfunctions during severe malaria.

To test our hypothesis and investigate the parasite and human host factors leading to complications in severe malaria, we intend leverage the enrolment and in-depth clinical classification of Plasmodium falciparum-infected patients as part of our ongoing International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research (ICEMR) at Ispat General Hospital in Rourkela, India. Fatal cases of severe malaria with clinically-defined brain, lung, liver or kidney dysfunction will be recruited, and samples from these tissues will be collected using minimally invasive autopsy techniques. We will use a digestion protocol that dissociates all the cells contained in a tissue to generate single-cell suspensions for each organ sample. Cells will then be sorted to obtain purified populations of parasitised red blood cells, endothelial cells, and immune cells. We will profile PfEMP1 variants, endothelial receptors, and immune cells type and quantity in all affected organs, as well as signatures of dysfunction in the plasma of these patients. In addition, we will perform an extensive analysis of the structural damage of the brain, lungs, liver and kidneys in fatal severe malaria.

By combining these complementary approaches, our project will provide an exhaustive profiling of the factors leading to specific organ dysfunction in severe malaria. This has never been undertaken before, in part due to the reluctance of the population to authorise full autopsies. Our project circumvents this issue by implementing a fast and mark-free needle-based tissue sampling technique. The information generated by our project will have the potential to help clinicians and scientists assessing new therapies to increase patient survival, refine tools to identify malaria patients at risk of developing organ failures and improve the design of future malaria vaccines.

Technical Summary

In low transmission settings, patients with severe falciparum malaria develop brain, lungs, liver and kidney dysfunction, either alone or in combination. The mechanisms leading to these complications have never been systematically investigated. We propose to implement minimally invasive tissue sampling techniques in well-characterised patients admitted at Ispat General Hospital in India to analyse for the first time multi-omics host and parasite factors leading to specific organ dysfunction in severe malaria. We will collect samples of brain, lung, liver, kidney and blood tissue from fatal cases with or without cerebral malaria, acute respiratory distress syndrome, jaundice and acute kidney injury. Half of the solid tissues will be used for the first extensive immunohistopathology analysis of its kind, and the rest digested to isolate parasitized red blood cells, endothelial cells, and immune cell populations. We will determine the subset of circulating parasite variants that sequestered in different organs of fatal malaria cases and their association with specific clinical complications by cloning, sequencing and comparing DBLa tags between tissues. In parallel, we will perform deep RNA sequencing to characterise global transcription profiles of endothelial cells from the same organs and identify potential PfEMP1/endothelial receptor combinations associated with specific organ dysfunctions. We will also determine the type, amount and transcriptome of immune cell populations present in each organ through single-cell transcriptomics. Lastly, we will carry out global metabolomic and complex lipidomic profiling of the plasma from fatal cases, non-fatal matched cases and uncomplicated malaria controls to identify signatures associated with specific organ failures and with fatality. The primary outcome of this project will be a better understanding of the factors influencing the development of organ dysfunction in severe malaria, with a view to developing new therapies.

Planned Impact

In the long term, the main beneficiaries of this research project will be populations living in malaria-endemic areas. While a significant reduction in transmission has been achieved over the past decade, the burden of severe malaria remains high and still leads to approximately 400 thousand deaths annually worldwide. Because artemisinin resistance in on the rise in Southeast Asia, and the leading pre-erythrocytic vaccine candidate RTS,S is only moderately effective to prevent severe infections, a better understanding of the pathophysiology of this complex disease is pivotal to develop new therapeutic approaches and inform the design of improved vaccines.

We propose to carry out an extensive characterisation of the different PfEMP1 variants sequestered within organs affected during severe malaria, including the brain, lungs, liver, and kidneys. In parallel, we will also profile the endothelial cell receptors in the microvasculature of these organs. This will constitute an important step towards the identification of novel vaccine antigens and will inform strategies targeting epitopes shared between clinically relevant PfEMP1 variants. The international malaria community, as well as partners in the pharmaceutical industry, will benefit directly and indirectly from the data generated by our project.

In addition, the histopathology analysis we intend to carry out will be combined with the screening and quantification of immune cell populations within brain, lung, liver and kidney tissues to identify potential immune mechanisms leading to specific organ dysfunction in severe malaria. The generated datasets will be available to immunologists nationally and internationally, for comparison with other immune-driven pathologies and assessment of potential adjunct therapies.

Lastly, the data generated by our metabolomic and lipidomic phenotyping will allow the identification of biomarkers associated with malaria infection severity, specific organ dysfunction, and clinical outcome. Such candidates will be available for further commercial development either by our team or by industrial partners.

Our team of investigators has strong collaborative links with Ispat General Hospital in Rourkela, India, a partner Institution in this application, but also the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute and its sites in Mali and in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Our existing collaborations with these academic groups overseas and in malaria-endemic areas places us in an ideal position to use the data generated through this project for translational research, ultimately leading to improved diagnosis and outcome for severe malaria patients.

Publications

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Carlton JM (2022) Advances in Basic and Translational Research as Part of the Center for the Study of Complex Malaria in India. in The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene

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Conroy AL (2023) The kidney-brain pathogenic axis in severe falciparum malaria. in Trends in parasitology

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Conroy AL (2023) The brain-kidney-retinal axis in severe falciparum malaria. in Trends in parasitology

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Gupta H (2021) Harnessing the Potential of miRNAs in Malaria Diagnostic and Prevention. in Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology

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Mohanty S (2022) Evidence of Brain Alterations in Noncerebral Falciparum Malaria. in Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America

 
Title Lipidomic and metabolomic plasma profiles in severe and non severe falciparum malaria 
Description We have analysed plasma samples from 113 patients with severe or non-severe malaria, and generated a complete metabolomic and lipidomic profile for these patients 
Type Of Material Data analysis technique 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact We are aiming to publish the results of this study within the next 6 months (currently carrying out analyses), and once available to the community, it will allow comparisons between different age groups associated with severe malaria (mainly children in Africa and adults in Asia) to better understand the difference in pathogenesis/pathology, and inform targeted adjunctive treatments. 
 
Title Repository of fatal cerebral malaria tissue samples 
Description We have collected and stored samples from the brain, liver and kidneys from 10 fatal cerebral malaria cases, as well as bone marrow from 4 patients. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2019 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact The analyses are still ongoing but the repository allowed us to carry out extensive immunohistochemistry analyses as part of the planned studies, and to develop new collaborations to expand these initial aims (all listed in the collaboration section). Several publications are currently being prepared using data generated through the analysis of these samples. 
 
Description Collaboration with EMBL Barcelona for the set-up of 3D BBB Models to mimic cerebral malaria lesions 
Organisation European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Department EMBL Barcelona
Country Spain 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have provided plasma samples from patients with cerebral malaria (CM) or uncomplicated malaria (UM) to be incubated in a novel 3D model of blood-brain barrier (BBB) developed at the collaborative site, to examine the effect of circulating factors on BBB alteration in CM.
Collaborator Contribution The collaborator has generated the 3D model
Impact The collaboration is multidisciplinary as it entails a combination of bioengineering (collaborator) and clinical samples derived from biomedical research (us). The analyses are still underway, so the outputs are not quantifiable yet.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Collaboration with Institut Cochin, Paris 
Organisation Cochin Institute
Country France 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have collected and provided samples from bone marrow from patients infected with P. falciparum.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborators have used new antibodies to identify the presence of gametocytes in the bone marrow of patients with malaria
Impact - immunofluorescence
Start Year 2019
 
Description Collaboration with Universiti Malaya to investigate the impact of P. knowlesi infection on the brain 
Organisation University of Malaya
Country Malaysia 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We teamed up with the group led by Prof. Yee Ling Lau at Universiti Malaya to explore the effects of P. knowlesi infection on the brain. For this we have received samples from a patient cohort enrolled in Malaysia as part of a separate project and are planning on measuring plasma markers associated with short- and long-term brain injury and compare the datasets and results with our cohort of P falciparum patients in India. We have led the MTA process and the ethical review and approval by the LSHTM board and have now started the sample analyses.
Collaborator Contribution Prof. Yee Ling Lau has provided us with rare samples from patients infected with P. knowlesi for our pilot study. She has also included age-matched controls from healthy individuals, and has led the ethical review of the pilot project.
Impact Sample shipment, MTA, and ethical approvals all done.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Collaboration with the Centre Interdisciplinaire de Recherches Médicales de Franceville (CIRMF) in Gabon 
Organisation Institute of Development Research (IRD)
Department Centre international de recherches médicales de Franceville
Country Gabon 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Currently analysing severe malaria samples from a cohort in Gabon, to compare features between Indian adults and Gabonese children.
Collaborator Contribution Collection of samples
Impact Not outputs yet, but expected in 2021
Start Year 2020
 
Description Collaboration with the University of Copenhagen 
Organisation University of Copenhagen
Country Denmark 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have provided post-mortem samples from 10 fatal cases for endothelial analyses.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborator provided new antibodies to perform immunohistochemistry analyses as part of the project.
Impact The analyses are still ongoing but a manuscript has been submitted with results obtained through this collaboration. - immunohistochemistry
Start Year 2019
 
Description Partnership with A*Star in Singapore 
Organisation Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR)
Country Singapore 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution We provided access to tissues (brain, liver, kidney) from 10 fatal severe malaria cases.
Collaborator Contribution A*Star provided access to their brand new Hyperion tissue flow cytometer to perform multiplexed IHC of postmortem samples from cerebral malaria patients from India.
Impact The collaboration is still active and the analyses underway. But the disciplines involved are: - immunohistochemistry - tissue flow cytometry - cell biology - molecular biology
Start Year 2020